Impact of analytical imprecision and bias on patient classification

Author:

Loh Tze Ping1,Markus Corey2,Lim Chun Yee3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Laboratory Medicine, National University Hospital , Singapore

2. Flinders University International Centre for Point-of-Care Testing, Flinders Health and Medical Research Institute, Flinders University , Adelaide , Australia

3. Engineering Cluster, Singapore Institute of Technology , Singapore

Abstract

Abstract Objectives An increase in analytical imprecision and/or the introduction of bias can affect the interpretation of quantitative laboratory results. In this study, we explore the impact of varying assay imprecision and bias introduction on the classification of patients based on fixed thresholds. Methods Simple spreadsheets (Microsoft Excel) were constructed to simulate conditions of assay deterioration, expressed as coefficient of variation and bias (in percentages). The impact on patient classification was explored based on fixed interpretative limits. A combined matrix of imprecision and bias of 0%, 2%, 4%, 6%, 8%, and 10% (tool 1) as well as 0%, 2%, 5%, 10%, 15%, and 20% (tool 2) was simulated, respectively. The percentage of patients who were reclassified following the addition of simulated imprecision and bias was summarized and presented in tables and graphs. Results The percentage of patients who were reclassified increased with increasing/decreasing magnitude of imprecision and bias. The impact of imprecision lessens with increasing bias such that at high biases, the bias becomes the dominant cause for reclassification. Conclusions The spreadsheet tools, available as Supplemental Material, allow laboratories to visualize the impact of additional analytical imprecision and bias on the classification of their patients when applied to locally extracted historical results.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

General Medicine

Reference7 articles.

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2. Setting analytical performance specifications using HbA1c as a model measurand;Loh,2021

3. Toward a framework for outcome-based analytical performance specifications: a methodology review of indirect methods for evaluating the impact of measurement uncertainty on clinical outcomes;Smith,2019

4. Development of paediatric biochemistry centile charts as a complement to laboratory reference intervals;Loh,2014

5. Derivation of pediatric within-individual biological variation by indirect sampling method: an LMS approach;Loh,2014

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